Explosive first quarter not enough for ISU

Record setting day was double edged sword for Cyclones

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Tulsa coach Bill Blankenship wouldn’t say whether this was the best season in school history. He just let the numbers speak for themselves.

“History will decide all that,” Blankenship said Monday after Tulsa capped its second 11-win season in school history with a 38-17 Liberty Bowl victory over Iowa State. “What I meant is that they’ve accomplished some things that nobody has done. That’s what I want to give them credit for.”

Tulsa also went 11-3 in 2008, but that team lost to East Carolina in the Conference USA championship game. This Tulsa team matched a school record in victories while also capturing the Conference USA title and winning the Liberty Bowl.

Iowa State culminated its history-making year culminated by avenging its season-opening loss to the Cyclones.

“That’s a huge deal for us,” Blankenship said. “We’ve had a team that won 11 before, so we tied that. We had a team that won the Liberty Bowl before and won Conference USA. We’ve done that. But we did it all in the same year (this season).”

Iowa State (6-7) defeated Tulsa 38-23 on Sept. 1 by coming back from a 16-7 deficit, but it was Tulsa that rallied in the rematch. Tulsa trailed 17-7 at the end of the first quarter before scoring the game’s final 24 points.

Tulsa won by capitalizing on the versatile rushing attack that carried the team all season.

Trey Watts, the game’s most valuable player, rushed for 149 yards. Alex Singleton had three short touchdown runs to give him a season total of 24. Ja’Terian Douglas rushed for 79 yards on eight carries.

“We never wavered, not for a second,” Watts said.

Both Tulsa and Iowa State had changed since their last meeting.

Iowa State’s Steele Jantz, who threw two touchdown passes and ran for a third score against Tulsa on Sept. 1, lost his starting job to redshirt freshman Sam Richardson. The Cyclones’ leading rusher (Shontrelle Johnson) and top tackler (Jake Knott) from the Sept. 1 game sat out the Liberty Bowl with injuries.

Tulsa linebacker Shawn Jackson was serving a three-game suspension during the last meeting with Iowa State. Jackson sacked Richardson on consecutive plays late in the first quarter Monday and forced a fumble in the game’s closing minutes.

“I felt like I left my guys down (in September),” Jackson said. “I wanted to give the defense a little spark.”

After going 6 of 7 with 114 yards and a touchdown in the first quarter, Richardson was 4 of 14 for 15 yards with an interception the rest of the way while battling flu-like symptoms. Jantz replaced Richardson early in the fourth quarter.

“You can’t ask much more from a young player like Sam,” said Iowa State linebacker A.J. Klein, who tied a Liberty Bowl record with 19 tackles. “He’s going to have a great career the rest of his time here at Iowa State. That’s the type of people we want to build this program around, people that will give it up, no matter what condition they’re in.”

Iowa State delighted a partisan crowd by taking the 17-7 lead on Edwin Arceo’s 33-yard field goal, Jeremy Reeves’ 31-yard interception return and Ernst Brun’s 69-yard reception. Tulsa has the smallest enrollment of any Football Bowl Subdivision program, and about 80 percent of the 53,687 fans were dressed in Iowa State cardinal-and-gold.

But after moving the ball at will in the opening period, Iowa State’s offense did virtually nothing right the rest of the day.

“Games are often won and lost at the line of scrimmage, and we did not play a physical enough brand of football to move the sticks enough and stay on the field enough to get it in the red zone, let alone get it in the end zone,” Iowa State coach Paul Rhoads said.

Tulsa took the lead for good with a pair of touchdown runs — 8 yards by quarterback Cody Green and 2 yards Singleton — in the first four minutes of the second quarter.

The Golden Hurricane’s comeback followed a familiar pattern. Tulsa headed into the bowl game ranked third in the nation in sacks (48) and 11th in rushing (240.2).

“These guys are a very tough-minded, physical and resilient team,” Blankenship said. “I couldn’t be prouder.”